Please apply online at 
www.protest-research.eu and send 
your proposal to teune@???. The extended deadline is 
August 31. More information regarding the conference can 
be found below (and in the attached CfP).
Best, Simon
Shaping Europe in a Globalized World? Protest Movements 
and the Rise of a Transnational Civil Society? Zürich, 
June 23-26, 2009
Panel: Transnational protest communities - transnational 
public spheres
Chair: Simon Teune, Freie Universität Berlin
As a political collective action protest necessarily takes 
place in a public mode. It is staged publicly to attract 
attention, to raise the awareness for a problem, to 
discuss causes and solutions, and  possibly  to 
influence political and economic decision-makers. On the 
one hand, public and commercial mass media are an 
important target of protesters, but they are not the only 
arena for public claims-making. Citizens are also 
addressed in direct communication in assemblies and (more 
or less random) encounters. On the other hand, the 
organization of protest and the impact on a wider public 
does not go without discussion on a smaller scale: 
Processes of mobilization are intrinsically linked to 
public spheres within the protest community. Meetings, 
insurgent media, mailing-lists, and other forms of 
exchange are arenas to build a community, define common 
aims and deliberate about strategies. Hence, the analysis 
of the public sphere may relate to an external or an 
internal level.
Obviously, the link between protest and public spheres 
does not stop at the borders of nation states. 
Transnational protest rests in transnational public 
spheres and it contributes to the shape of these, no 
matter if we deal with public spheres that build on mass 
media, assemblies or encounters. In a transnational 
environment, however, opportunities and constraints for 
the development of a public debate are different, due to 
linguistic, cultural and structural heterogeneity. 
Translation and re-contextualization are indispensable 
techniques for new commonalities to emerge on the 
transnational level. Notwithstanding such attempts to 
construct commonalities transnational public spheres are 
likely to reproduce material and symbolic inequalities. 
The access to an arena of exchange and the perspectives 
that are brought in shape the discussions both among 
protesters and on a larger scale. As far as public and 
commercial mass media are concerned, the bulk of the 
discussions continues to be bound to a national framework 
which is more or less permeable for influences from other 
countries. To stir public discussion in other countries 
under these conditions can be a major goal of mobilization 
but it is also dependent on a number of factors such as 
resonant frames and images, geographical or imagined 
proximity, etc.
Papers proposed for this panel might address one or more 
of the following questions:
-    Under which conditions do transnational insurgent public 
spheres develop? When do attempts to transnational 
exchange fail?
-    Which factors in the establishment of a transnational 
public sphere (e.g. images, lingua francas, frame 
building, physical meetings, etc.) bridge differences 
between communities that are nationally bound?
-    How do material and symbolic resources translate in 
protesters transnational public spheres? Are they more 
than an elite exchange? Do they overcome or continue 
paternalism or colonialism? -    When and how do commercial 
and public mass media cover transnational protest?
-    What are the differences between mass media in national 
contexts and how do protesters deal with these (e.g. using 
the boomerang effect)?
-    Which differences can be found in public spheres on 
different levels (e.g. commercial vs. alternative mass 
media; protesters physical vs. virtual meetings)?